Whitney v. United States

181 U.S. 104, 21 S. Ct. 565, 45 L. Ed. 771, 1901 U.S. LEXIS 1347
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 1, 1901
Docket133
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 181 U.S. 104 (Whitney v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Whitney v. United States, 181 U.S. 104, 21 S. Ct. 565, 45 L. Ed. 771, 1901 U.S. LEXIS 1347 (1901).

Opinion

Me. Justice Peokham,

after making the aboye statement of facts, delivered the opinion of the court.

The judges of the court below, while rejecting the claim of appellants, differed widely in regard to the grounds upon which such rejection should be placed. Mr. Justice Sluss, in an opinion that was concurred in by Mr. Justice Fuller, said that the case was to be decided under the Mexican colonization law of August 18,1821, and the regulations of November 21, 1828, which in his judgment had not been totally repealed by the law of April 4,1837, and the grant, being subject to the first named law and to the regulations above mentioned, coulcl not be valid for a greater quantity than eleven square leagues, nor become a perfect title until the grant had been approved by the departmental assembly.

It appears that eleven square leagues would embrace about 50,000 acres of land, and hence-a grant of 415,000 acres would, under the law and regulations, be far beyond the power of the officials to make to any one person."

Mr. Justice Murray, while concurring in the conclusion'to reject the claim, was of opinion that the law of 1824 and the regulations- of 1828 had been entirely repealed by the law of April 4, 1837, but he did not think that the governor had the power merely as representative of the supreme executive to make the grant, and there was no evidence of any special power having been delegated to him.

Mr. Chief Justice Need also concurred in the conclusion to reject the claim but did not agree with all that was said in the opinion of Mr. Justice Sluss, being himself of opinion that, while the law of 1824 was repealed by that of 1837, the regulations of 1828 were not thereby wholly repealed. He thought that the grant in this case ivas made, not under the law of 1824, but under the regulations of 1828 ; that the law regulated the matter of the disposition of the public lands within the States, and conferred upon the executive the power to make all necessary *108 regulations for the disposition of such lands within the Terri tories, of which New Mexico was one, and the question in his judgment was, not whether the law remained in force but whether the regulations continued operative when the grant was made; that it was manifest the law which governed the matter within the States might be repealed without at all affecting the regulations established by the executive governing the same subject within the Territories. Being, subject to those regulations, we suppose the quantity of the grant was an insuperable bar to its validity, in the. view of the.Chief Justice.

Mr. Justice Stone dissented from' the decree rejecting the claim, and was of opinion that the making of the grant in question was within the competency-of the supreme executive, and that Governor Armijo was his appropriate ministerial agent in its execution.

In-reviewing questions arising out of'Mexican laws relating, to land titles we recognize what an exceedingly difficult matter it is to determine with anything like certainty what laws were in force in Mexico at any particular time prior to the occupation of the country by the American forces in 1846-1848. This difficulty exists because of the frequent political changes which took place in that country from the time the Spanish rule was first thrown off down to the American occupation. Revolutions and counter-revolutions, empires and republics, followed each other with great rapidity and in bewildering confusion, and emperors, presidents, generals and dictators, each for a short period, played the foremost part in a country where revolution seems during that time to have been the nal ural order of things. Among the first acts of each government was generally one repealing and nullifying all those of its predecessors.

If, however, the validity of this grant wtere to be decided under the provisions of the colonization law of 1824, and the regulations passed in T828, it seems to us there would be little difficulty in determining that-the appellants had failed to make out their case. The provisions of the act of 1824 were plainly violated in this grant, because it contained more than eleven square leagues. This was prohibited by that law. Reynolds’ *109 Compilation of Spanish & Mexican Land Laws, pp. 121,122, sec. 12; Hall’s Mexican Law, p. 149, sec. 498.

And also, before the grant in question was made, there had been a previous one, dated November 28, 1845, conveying to Sandoval the land embraced in what was called the Bosque del Apache grant, which also exceeded eleven square leagues in extent, the grant being made by the same governor (Armijo), although juridical possession was not delivered until March 7, 1846. Having obtained a grant of more than eleven square leagues before he made his petition for the grant now in issue, he had acquired all that the law of 1824 permitted him to take, and the subsequent grant was not valid. United States v. Hartnell, 22 How. 286.

Anothér objection to the title is that there is no record of its, existence ip. the archives of New Mexico. Although no question is made as to the genuineness of the papers set forth in the foregoing statement of fact, namely, the petition of Sandoval, its allowance,by Governor Armijo, the certificate of the comptroller and acting treasurer, and thé certificate of the delivery of juridical possession by the justice of the peace, yet none of these came from the archives of the country, and.there is no record that the departmental assembly ever concurred in the grant, as is necessary under the law of 1824. Reynolds, p. 142, sec. 5. If the approval of that body could not be obtained, the governor was to report to the supreme government, forwarding the proceedings in the matter for its consideration. Sec. 6. Nothing of this kind appears in the archives or in the records of the assembly. Nor has there been produced even from the hands of the claimants any approval of the grant by the assembly. No matter how formal and complete the written documentary evidence of title may be, yet when coming from private hands it is insufficient to establish a Mexican grant if there is nothing in the public records to show that it ever existed. Peralta v. United States, 3 Wall. 434, 440. Mr. Justice Davis, in delivering the opinion of the court in that case, said:

“ The Mexican nation attached a great deal of form to the disposaion of its lands, and required many things to be doné before the proceedings could ripen into a grant. But the im *110 portant fact to be noticed is, that a record was required tó be kept of whatever was done. This record was a guard against fraud and imposition, and enabled the government to ascertain with accuracy what portions of the public lands had been alienated. The record was the grant, and without it the .title was not divested. The governor was required to give a document to the party interested, which was evidence of title, and enabled him to get possession; but this ‘ titulo ’ did not divest the title, .unless record was made in conformity with law.”

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Bluebook (online)
181 U.S. 104, 21 S. Ct. 565, 45 L. Ed. 771, 1901 U.S. LEXIS 1347, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitney-v-united-states-scotus-1901.